Microtubules Promote the Non-cell Autonomy of MicroRNAs by Inhibiting their Cytoplasmic Loading into ARGONAUTE1 in<i>Arabidopsis</i>

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<jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title><jats:p>Mobile microRNAs (miRNAs) serve as local and long-distance signals in developmental patterning and stress responses in plants. However, mechanisms governing the non-cell autonomous activities of miRNAs remain elusive. Here, we show that mutations that disrupt microtubule dynamics are specifically defective for the non-cell autonomous actions of mobile miRNAs, including miR165/6 that is produced in the endodermis and moves to the vasculature to pattern xylem cell fates in<jats:italic>Arabidopsis</jats:italic>roots. We show that KTN1, a subunit of a microtubule-severing enzyme, is required in source and intermediary cells to inhibit the loading of miR165/6 into ARGONUATE1 (AGO1), which is cell-autonomous, to enable the miRNA‟s cell exit. Microtubule disruption enhances the association of miR165/6 with AGO1 in the cytosol. These findings suggest that, while cell-autonomous miRNAs load into AGO1 in the nucleus, cytoplasmic AGO1 loading of mobile miRNAs is a key step regulated by microtubules to promote the range of miRNA‟s cell-to-cell movement.</jats:p>

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